So I am currently studying HTTP file uploads (in the context of using a HttpWebRequest
to upload some files to an external API) and generally I see a few dozen dashes being used as the boundary. Browsers seem to usually add a randomly chosen hexadecimal number to the dashes as well.
This seems horribly clunky to say the least (dare I say a flaw in the protocol?). Since my particular usecase involves data that might very well contain the boundary I use (no matter what I pick; the data is a dump of sorts) I need to be 100% certain the file I upload doesn't break things. Randomly picking a number is simply not acceptable to me, even if the chance of an actual collision is 1 in a billion. Retrying with a different randomly picked boundary if the target script detects some error isn't something I am fond of either.
Is the only way for me to avoid this to scan through my entire file (often many megabytes large) to see if my chosen boundary does not exist? I need to perform many different requests with uploads, so in order to avoid the I/O penalty I want to avoid scanning over the entire file.
Or is there some kind of size parameter I can pass so that the boundary becomes little more than a formality?
What am I missing? Changing the remote API is not an option, so encoding in Base64 or adding some kind of escape character aren't possible.